This shows the actual transfer rate profile of each hard disk drive. Any large dip in transfer rate reflects the use of spare sectors to replace bad ones on the platters. Lots of dips in any curve is evidence of poor platter quality. However, keep in mind that platter quality varies from drive to drive and generally improves over time as the manufacturer improves the fabrication process.

The platter transfer rate profile is important as it gives you a better idea of how hard disk drives perform across the entire range of their storage capacity. Benchmark scores alone cannot tell you how a hard disk drive will perform across the entire platter.

In hard disk drives that had the same areal density but different capacities, their platter profiles were quite different. A good example would be the 1 TB and 500 GB versions of the Western Digital Caviar GP hard disk drives. Both started out at roughly the same maximum transfer rate but because of its larger capacity, the 1 TB Caviar GP was able to better sustain its transfer rates than the 500 GB Caviar GP.

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Platter Transfer Rate Profile (Mobile HDDs)

This shows the actual transfer rate profile of each hard disk drive (or solid state drive). Any large dip in transfer rate reflects the use of spare sectors to replace bad ones on the platters. Lots of dips in any curve is evidence of poor platter quality. However, keep in mind that platter quality varies from drive to drive and generally improves over time as the manufacturer improves the fabrication process.

We can see the effect of the 7200 RPM spindle speed on performance by comparing the 500 GB Scorpio Black (WD5000BEKT) against its 5400 RPM brother, the 500 GB Western Digital Scorpio (WD5000BEVT). Both the Scorpio Black and the Scorpio use the same platters and thus have the same areal density. Because its larger 32 MB buffer has no effect on this test, the Scorpio Black's only advantage in this test is its higher spindle speed of 7200 RPM. This single change alone gave it a solid 10-11% boost in platter-to-buffer transfer rate.

Again, the capacity of a drive can affect its performance. Take for example, the Seagate Momentus 5400.5 and the Western Digital Scorpio. The Momentus 5400.5 started off much faster but because of its smaller 250 GB capacity, it could not sustain its transfer rate as well as the Scorpio. From the cross-over point of about 175 GB up till 300 GB, the Scorpio was actually faster than the Momentus 5400.5.

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